Storming foreign shores
Non-U.S. stocks gain favor among investment advisers
By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch
Last Update: 8:37 PM ET Feb. 16, 2005
CBS-MarketWatch
LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- Conventional wisdom suggests devoting 10 percent to 15 percent of an investment portfolio to international stocks, but nowadays that advice might be short-sighted.
Recommended allocations of 20 percent, 30 percent and even 50 percent have become increasingly popular as financial advisers and investment professionals look outside of the
"Valuations look better overseas right now. Prospects for stocks look good around the world, but foreign markets are a little cheaper on average," said Tom Hazuka, chief investment officer at Mellon Capital Management.
The firm's model portfolio favors stocks over bonds and cash, Hazuka said, with two-thirds of that stance earmarked to non-U.S. companies.
While shareholders of large
According to TrimTabs Investment Research, $48.2 billion flowed into international mutual funds (not including
Investors have pumped an estimated $4.6 billion into non-U.S. equity funds this year through Feb. 9, according to Emerging Portfolio Fund Research data. The pace reflects an "extensive asset allocation shift taking place," the report noted, with cash going to global/international, emerging markets, Europe,
U.S. dollar weakness is a key reason for the favorable interest. The dollar's 20 percent decline versus the euro in 2004 alone put wind in the sails of many non-U.S. stocks, especially those with large-scale European operations. That, in turn, tended to lift results for related mutual funds.
Faraway eyes
Ben Tobias, a certified financial planner at Tobias Financial Advisors in
"If you believe in true globalization, and I do... capital markets overseas over the long term will have to grow faster than the markets in the
"A very big risk overseas as opposed to the
Tobias recommends four mutual funds for broad international exposure: American Funds EuroPacific (AEPGX: news, chart, profile) ; Julius Baer International Equity (BJBIX: news, chart, profile) ; DFA International Value (DFIVX: news, chart, profile) and DFA International Small Company (DFISX: news, chart, profile) .
The Julius Baer fund, for example, counts among its top holdings energy giant BP (BP: news, chart, profile) (UK:BP: news, chart, profile) and telecommunications leader Vodafone (VOD: news, chart, profile) (UK:VOD: news, chart, profile) , both U.K.-based, and OTP Bank (OTPGF: news, chart, profile) , a top financial services provider in Hungary.
Chris Orndorff, managing principal for Payden & Rygel Investment Management, advocates more targeted international exposure. He suggests that investors divide a 25 percent non-U.S. stock allocation by putting 5 percent in Europe, 10 percent in
"The fastest economic growth is in the emerging markets --
A place for emerging markets
The emerging-market theme is a common strategy among advisers who are increasing allocations to non-U.S. stocks.
Leila Heckman, president of Heckman Global Advisors in
"We continue to like emerging markets because they tend to be cheaper. Interest rates are coming down in general, and they continue to have momentum money flow in," she said.
But given the volatility of emerging markets, Heckman advises investors rely on a fund or financial adviser with experience in this specialized area.
One often overlooked advantage to investing outside of the
"The riskiness of a portfolio is determined by several things," she said. "One is the volatility of the assets you're investing in, and the other is the correlation of the stocks or countries you're investing in. When you put those things together...around 20 or 30 percent you actually get a reduction in risk from a 100 percent
Brad Durham, EmergingPortfolio.com's managing director, said he favors a 50-50 divide between non-U.S. and
Emerging-markets stocks belong in a portfolio for several reasons,
"The Julius Baer International Equity fund has a 20 to 25 percent weighting in emerging markets. It's no coincidence that it's one of the top performing international equity funds,"
John Rice, investment officer at Keats, Connelly and Associates in
"If you're going to go after the exposure for overall stock markets, you should have half outside the
Barbara Kollmeyer is a reporter for MarketWatch in
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